THE MICHIGAN DAILY r PROTESTANT FACILITIES: Student Church Guilds Plan Frosh Orientation Programs I .r. Plans to acquaint incoming Protestant students with the pro- ram and facilities of their re- spective churches have been made by the student guilds on campus for orientation week. Roger Williams Guild, of the Baptist Church, will hold a pi- nic for freshmen at 6 p. m. Fri- day. At 10 a. m. Sunday the stu- dent class will begin discussion of the New Testament. Morning services will be held at 11 a. in., Rev. Chester Loucks, minister. The guild will hold its regular weekly meeting at .6 p.m. at the church. An open house will be given Fri- day from 7 to 9 p. in. by the Congregational-Disciples Guild at Goal of SRA Is Inter-Faith Understandingo Association Program Covers Many Fields Bringing students together in an inter-denominational atmosphere for work, study and recreation is the aim of the Student Religious Association at Lane Hall. Under the leadership of Pres- ident Keitha Harmon and the cabinet composed of the secretary and seven department heads, the association carries out a regular program designed to meet the varied interests of students. It also sponsors special lectures and joins with other organizations in promoting relief drives and ther campus-wide events. Advisors for. SRA are Dr. Franklin H. Littell, director of the association and John. Craig, program director. All University students are au- tomatically members of SRA and may participate in its activities. Among the regularly scheduled events are seminars on social and political problems, meetings of the Committeeon Cooperation whch last year visited various churches in order to develop understanding between the faiths, Coffee Hours and Saturday lunches. Seminars Held The seminars are led by Dr. Littell and other speakers who have special interest in the sub- ject under discussion. Last year a seminar on "The Sociology of Religion" was conducted by Dr. Littell and Prof. Theodore M. Newcomb of the sociology depart- ment. Coffee Hour, held each Friday, provides an opportunity for a purely social afternoon after the week's work. Faculty members or visiting speakers are often invited as guests, arid students have the opportunity to familiarize them- selves with the program of SRA,, meet other students interested in the association, or just sit and re- lax over a cup of coffee. The program for Saturday lunch includes a general discussion of issues or problems raised by a book which is reviewed by a member of'the group. Another opportunity for informal discussion is provid- ed by the weekly "bull sessions." Relief Drives The association cooperates with other campus groups in sponsor- ing relief drives such as the World Student Service Fund tag day which last year collected $4,1541 for student aid abroad.7 Under the direction of the Pub-s lic Affairs Committee, one of the1 association's departments, special lectures are presented. In cooper- ation with The Daily the commit- tee also conducts Town Hall, where local and out of town< speakers discuss issues of campus, national and international inter- est. Plans for the present Student Legislature originated in a Town Hall meeting, One activity which students look forward to is the chance to; "get away from it all" on associa- tion retreats. They are held sev- eral times each semester at farms or camps and provide an oppor- tunity for enjoying outdoor sportst %nd catching up on sleep as well is talking about programs and naking plans. the Guild house. Sunday morning worship atthe Congregational Church will begin at 10:45 a.m. andrat the Disciples Church at 10:50 a.m. The guild meeting. for students of both the Congre- gational and Disciple Churches, will be held at 6 p.m. in the base- ment of the Congregational Church. Rev. H. L. Pickerill is ad- visor for the guild, and Jean Garee is student assistant direc- tor. * t Episcopal Canterbury Club will hold open house from 4 to 6 p.m., Friday. A dinner party for fresh- men, 6 p.m. Saturday., at therclub house, will precede the Inter- guild Party at Lane Hall. The Sunday schedule will include Holy Communion, 8 a.m.; a study group, 10 a.m.; morning worship, 11 a.m.; Canterbury Club meeting, 6 p.m.; choral evening service, 8 p.m. and coffee hour, 8:45 p.m. Rev. John H. Burt is Episcopal chaplain, and Maxine Westphal is counselor for women students. * * The Evangelical and Reformed Church, Rev. Cornelius Loew, minister, will welcome students at an open house, 7 p.m. Friday. The weekly guild meeting will be held at 5 p.m. Sunday. * * * A buffet supper will be given for new students by Gamma Delta of the Lurheran Church at 6 p.m. Friday. Sunday morning worship will begin at 11 a.m. and the Gamma Delta supper meeting will be held at 5:15 p.m. Rev. A. T. Scheips is the Lutheran minister. - e* * * The Lutheran Student Associa- tion will meet for spper and an open house honoring new stu- dents, 6:30 p.m. at the Luteran Student Center. The Sunday pro- gram willtinclude breakfast, 830 a.m. at the Center; Bible study, 9 a.m.; morning worship, 10:30 at both the Zion Lutheran Church and the Trinity Lutheran Church; and the association meeting, 5:30 p.m. at the Zion Lutheran Parish Hall. Rev. Henry Yoder is pas- tor of. the association, and Emma Schmidt is counselor for women students. Christ Lutheran Chapel at Wil- low Run, Rev. Robert Boettiger, minister, will hold Sunday serv ices at 11 a.m. * * An Orientation banquet will be held for new students by the Wes- ley Foundation of the Methodist Church at 6 p. m. Friday. Sun- day worship will begin at 10:40 a.m. and the guild will meet at 5:30 p.m. Rev. J. B. Kenna is Methodist minister, and Doris Reed is assistant student director. Westminster Guild, of the Presbyterian Church, will give a campfire reception and supper, 6 p.m. Friday. The Sunday schedule will include breakfast and Bible class, 9:15 a.m.; worship service, 10:45 a.m. and the guild meeting at 5 p.m. Dr. W. P. Lemon and Rev. James P. VanPernis are Presbyterian ministers and Mrs. Ruth Kirk is student assistant. * * * Sunday worship services for the Reformed Guild will be held at 10 a.m. in Lane Hall. The guild will have its meeting at 7:30 p.m. in Lane Hall. Rev. L. A. Verduin is pastor. * * * The adult study group of the Unitarian Church, Rev. E. H. Redman, minister, will meet at 10 a.m. Sunday. Worship services are held at 11 a.m. and the Unitarian Guild meets at 6:30 p.m. An interdenominational wor- ship service for Willow Run resi- dents is conducted by Rev, J. Ed- gar Edwards at 11 a.m. Sunday in West Lodge. * * * Michigan Christian Fellowship' will hold Bible study at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Lane Hall. MCF also meets at 4 p.m. Sunday for worship. * * * Inter-Guild, an organization which represents the above groups, leads in making plans for greater cooperation among the Protestant churches. It will give a welcoming party for new students at 8 p.m. Friday in Lane Hall. FOR MEN ONLY-Shown above is the Michigan Union, center of men's life on campus. On the left is the front door, through which no women are allowed to pass. They may enter the side door, however, for the weekly dances and other social events. Rumor has it that since the death of George, the doorman, an occasional female figure has been seen flitting through the forbidden main portals. ** * * SAN'S HOME IS Center of Campus Activities For iffen Is Michigan Union Hillel Serves As Center for JewishFaith Foundation Provides Cultural Program B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation performs social, cultural and re- ligious functions for Jewish stu- dents and aids them in adjust- ment to college life by providing a place to work, play, study and make friends. Under the leadership of Rabbi Herschel Lyman, Foundation President Howard Freeman, the student council and 'student direc- tors, Hillel will carry out a pro- gram of films, concerts, athletics, fireside discussions, Inter-faith nights, personal counsel and serv- ices on Friday nights and. other religious holidays. To Hold Open House In order to meet the incoming students, the Foundation will hold open house in the afternoon and evening Sept. 19, 20 and 21. Dur- ing the open houses new students will have an opportunity to be- come acquainted with the Hillel program and facilities. They will also meet many of their fellow students and future professors. One of Hillel's functions is to supply a religious and cultural background for Jewish students on campus. This religious program will commence with High Holy Day Services on Rosh Hashonah at 8 p.m. Sept. 14 and all day Sept. 15 in Kellogg Auditorium. Yom-Kuppur Services will, be held at 8 p.m. Sept. 23 and all day Sept. 24 in Lydia Mendelssohn Auditorium. Friday evening serv- ices will be conducted weekly be- ginning on Sept. 26. Hillel aims to provide programs and facilities to fit as many of the students' interests as possible. Those interested in drama or writ- ing can express their talents through the Hillel Players or the Hillel News. The News is a month- ly journal and the Player's, a stu- dent theatrical organization en- tertaining here and at B'nai B'rith lodges throughout the state. Hebrew Courses Offered Courses in beginning, interme- diate and advanced Hebrew are offered to interested students. Rabbi Lyman will also conduct a seminar on "The Jewish Person- ality as Reflected in Our Modern Literature." Other courses in Jew- ish history, ethics, customs and folkways may be presented if there is sufficient demand. Students are invited to take ad- vantage of the Foundation's large phonograph record collection and the well stocked Louis Weiss Me- morial Library. Once again back to the pre-I war level, fraternity life will be in full swing during the coming fall semester. Thirty-one of Michigan's 41 fraternities have announced that they will be operating on an ac- tive basis again. Most of these have either reopened their houses which were abandoned during the war or obtained new ones. To accommodate long chapter rolls created by the return of many members from the services, some fraternities have acquired annexes, and all are doubling up on living and sleeping quarters. Those who register with the In- ter-Fraternity Council will see rushing on the same scale as in pre-war years. During the war these activities were limited for the most part to small informal get-togethers. Freshmen Must Register Freshmen wishing to rush must register during the first week of the semester in the IFC offices in the Union. Rushing will begin Sunday, Sept. 28 and continue through Oct. 9. The registration card will have space for the rushee to specify any fraternity in which he may have a particular interest. Each chapter on campus will hold an open house at the begin- ning of the rushing period, en- abling the rushee to visit all the houses and meet their members. Use "Preference List" System A "preference-list" system of bidding, inaugurated last year, will enable both the rushee and the fraternity to indicate preferences at the close of the rushing period. The office of the Dean of Students will then honor these bids and acceptances according to their re- spective positions on the lists. Some fraternities have indicated a desire to do away with the tra- ditional hazing during pledgeship, but for most the paddle will be king during the prospective mem- ber's first semester after pledging. ,Those who are pledged to fra- ternities must meet the scholastic requirements of the IFC and Dean of Students before they may be1 initiated. A scholastic average of C or better (depending on the number of semester hours being carried) is necessary. It is customary for initiations to be held early in the second se- mester after pledging. Originated in 1845 Fraternities at Michigan origi- nated in 1845, four years after classes were begun on the Ann Arbor campus, They are respon- sible' for many of the oldest tra- ditions and activities which stu- dents now honor. Joining a fraternity offers a man an opportunity to make friends, with whom he can re- main throughout his college career and even afterwards, according to an IFC publication. Other ad- vantages to be had through an affiliation with a fraternity are listed as: opportunity for the de- velopment of personality, experi- ence in group living in which men must assume their share of obliga- tions, and training in the work of an executive through management of the chapter. President Ruthven has written, "The fraternity is as typical a feature of American colleges as the division of students into freshmen, sophomore, junior, and senior classes. Each fraternity or- ganization, as compared with un- organized groups of students, pos- sesses extremely important and valuable assets to start with - common aims, the support and backing of alumni who maintain a lively interest in the success of the chapter, national organization, and unusual opportunities for the cultivation of lasting friendships." Fraternities Listed A tentative list of fraternities which will be active in the fall is: Acacia, Alpha Delta Phi, Alpha Sigma Phi, Alpha Tau Omega, Beta Theta Pi, Chi Phi, Chi Psi, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Delta Tau Delta. 'Delta Upsilon, Kappa Nu, Kap- pa Sigma, Lambda Chi Alpha, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Kappa Tau, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Sigma Del- ta, Phi Sigma Kappa, Phi Kappa Psi, Pi Lambda Phi, Psi Upsilon, Sigma;Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Alpha Mu. Sigma Chi, Sigma Phi, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Theta Chi, Theta Del- ta Ci, 2Trigon, Zeta Psi, and Zeta Beta Tau. 31 HOUSES ACTIVE: Fraternities in Full Swing; Rushing Will Begin Sept. 28 Through these portals no woman shall pass - is the unwritten law that hangs over the front door of the Union, Michigan men's castle. A daily center of male life, and a seat of social functions on week- ends, the Union has facilities for a variety of activities ranging from a quick dip in the swimming pool to an afternoon of leisure read- ing in the Pendleton Library. In addition, the Union sponsors a number of events throughout the year. Every man, upon paying his tu.. ition fee, is entitled to a member- ship card in the Union, and there- by is entitled to the use of its facilities. Membership cards are distributed by the student offices early in the semester. Michigan men may choose their recreation from a ping pong room. a billiard room, checker and chess boards, or the bowling alleys, in addition to the swimming pool. Visitors Honored at Union Visitors to the University may, be housed in the 195 guest rooms located upstairs in the Union. Of convenience to students is the main desk where checks can be cashed and bus tickets and tickets for University events may be pur- chased. Detroit and Ann Arbor newspapers, current magazines, candy, cigarettes and chewing gum are also on sale at the desk. The second floor ballroom is the scene of the traditional week- end dances which are held every Friday and Saturday when there is no other major campus event taking place. Smokers, mixers and large meetings are also held in this room. Comfortable chairs, cushions, divans, writing tables and quiet may be found in the North Lounge. In the Pendleton Library, dona- tion of the widow of Edward Wal- do Pendleton. '72, current best sellers and popular magazines are available. Taproom Has Tradition An afternoon snack or a square meal will be served to men in the Taproom down in the basement. Here may be found evidences of the old Michigan tradition of sen- iors carving their names on the 'taproom table tops. Offices of several campus or- ganizations are housed in the Un- ion. Michigamua, Vulcans, Druids, Inter-Fraternity Council and the Men's Glee Club are among those who have headquarters here. The Union is governed by a Board of Directors composed of students, faculty members, alumni representatives and one member RIDER S THE PEN HOSPITAL "See Doc Rider!" 115 WEST LIBERTY ST. FRIDAY, 'AUGUST"15.-1947 Daily Spiritual Program Held At St._Mary's Catholics Sponsor Weekly Study Groups At St. Mary's Chapel, Catholic students, under the direction of Fr. Frank J. McPhillips and Fr. John F. Bradley, participate in a program designed to aid them spiritually, intellectually and so- cially. The spiritual program includes Masses daily at 7, 8, and 9 a.m., and on Sundays at 8, 9:30, 11 and 12 a.m. Confessions are heard each Saturday afternoon and eve- ning, and daily before the morn- ing Masses. An annual retreat, with a prominent speaker presid- ; ing, is held the first week of Dc- of the Board of Regents. Second- semester freshmen may become try-outs on the Union staff to work under the officers. , Union Opened in 1907 The idea of constructing a com- mon gathering place for men was conceived in 1903, and it was on the day of the Ohio State game in 1907 that the Union opened its first home - the former house of Judge Cooley - to its members. Although an additional wing was added in 1912, the "Cooley House" soon proved inadequate, and in 1915 a campaign to raise $1,000,000 for a new clubhouse was launched. Alumni and under- graduates contributed subscrip- tions of $50 to make up most of the fund. Since that time further campaigns have been staged to provide for the additions that completed the Union as it is to- day, increasing the total cost to more than $2,000,000. During orientation week the Un- ion invites freshmen to smokers where they meet sports figures, and representatives of The Daily, Inter-Fraternity Council, Tri- angles, Sphinx and other campus organizations. cember. Educational Program Weekly study groups and dis- cussions and special lectures by guest speakers are included in the educational program. Questions and problems of special interest to Catholic students are treated in these meetings. Father McPhillips and Father Bradley are available for private instruction and confer- ence at all times. The social program is under the direction of Newman Club, which is affiliated with the National Federation of Newman Clubs, Programs are planned and carried out by the club officers, which in- clude a president, two vice-presi- dents and an executive commit- tee of ten students who are as- signed specific tasks and share in .handling the various functions sponsored by the group. Open House Weekly open houses, Sunday morning breakfasts, parties and an annual formal dance make up the club's program. An open house to welcome new students and ac- quaint them with Newman Club will be held from 8 to 12 p.m., Sept. 19, in the club rooms at St. Mary's Chapel. The Michigan Newman Club, which has a membership of over 550, is one of the largest chapters in the country and has sister groups on many other secular campuses. A 4? 1iI =F , ( 1 -4I aure LAW MEDICAL DENTAL PUBLIC HEALTH i BOOKS and SUPPLIES STURDY, COMFORTABLE CASUALS FOR MEN AND WOMEN ,r 'f A SANDAL for the Gals for a occasions ... Black Suede Silver and Gok S0AFERS fall kinds and colors SADDLE OXFORDS A "must" in all campus wardrobes WOMEN'S ... $6.95 MEN'S . . . $9.95 . store especially stocked and equipped __________________ _ - - - - ---- - -----__-- - --- -cif -111 to serve these schools. FE-ATURED FOR WOMEN British Walkers Penaljo Colt-Cromwell Friendly Sports FOR MEN British Walkers Edwin Clapp Curtis Chas. A. Eaton POPCORN PETE SAYS: Making good things to eat is our vectIon; Making good friends is our avocation! AT THE TOWN SHOP: butter-made popcorn, crisp carmelcorn, tangy cheese-corn, deluscious candy apples. We believ wil enjoy e that you our service. WOMEN'S MEN'S . . $6.95 up ....$8.50 up 'I ~tTrTT"' n)T'l /OON T7 1111 IIIIIIIII ( 1\ / L.. ( fIl IIIIIIIIII dim